Gilbert. Rosamunde Pilcher

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Awaking; aware, without opening his eyes, of sunlight and a band of
warmth lying across the bed, Bill Rawlins was
pervaded with a sense of marvellous contentment and well-being. A number of pleasant thoughts crossed his mind. That it was a Sunday so he didn't have
to go to work. That it was going to be a fine day. That the warm, soft body of
his wife lay close to him, her head pillowed
in the curve of his arm. That he was, in all probability, one of the most fortunate men in the world.

The bed was huge and downy. An old aunt of Bill's had given it to them as a wedding present when he had married Clodagh two months ago. It had been her marriage bed, his
aunt had informed him with certain 0relish, and to make the gift more acceptable,
had thrown in a beautiful new mattress and
six pairs of 0heirloom linen sheets.

It was about the only thing in the house, apart from his desk and his clothes, that actually belonged to Bill. Marrying a widow had posed certain complications, but where they were to live was not one of them, because there could have
been no question of Clodagh and her two small girls moving into Bill's
two-roomed bachelor flat, and there seemed
little point going to all the hassle and
expense of buying themselves a new house when hers was already so perfect. His
flat had been in the middle of the
town, within walking distance of the office, but this house lay a mile or so out into the country, and had as well the advantage of a large and
rambling garden. Besides, Clodagh
pointed out, it was the children's
home. Here were their secret hideouts, the swing in the 0sycamore tree, the playroom in the attic.

Bill needed no persuasion. It was the right and obvious thing to do.

'You're going to live in Clodagh's house?' his friends exclaimed, looking astonished.

'Why
not?'

'A bit tricky, surely. After all, that's where she lived with her first husband.'

'Very happily,
too,’ Bill pointed out. 'And I hope she'll be
just as happy with me.’

Clodagh's husband, and the father of her two little girls, had been killed in a tragic car smash three years ago. Bill, although he had worked and lived in the district for some years, did not meet her until two years later, when he was asked, as a suitable man to make up numbers,
to a dinner party, and there found himself sitting next to a tall
and slender girl, whose thick blonde hair
was wound up into a knot at the back of her elegant head.

Her finely boned face he instantly found beautiful, and yet, at the same time, sad. Her eyes were grave, her mouth hesitant. It was this very sadness that caught at his tough and experienced heart. Her fragile neck, exposed by the old-fashioned hairstyle, seemed to him vulnerable as a child's, and when at last he made her laugh, and her smile came into its own, he fell, like any young man, head over heels in love.

Clodagh was thirty-three;
Bill was thirty-seven. A con­firmed
bachelor. That's what he was known as. A handsome, cheerful sort of fellow, good for a game of golf, and a useful player at the local tennis
club, but definitely a confirmed
bachelor. How would he manage?

He managed by treating the two small girls like grown-ups. They were
called Emily and Anna. Emily was eight and Anna was six. Despite his
determination not to be intimidated by them, he found their straight stares unnerving. They were both fair, with long hair and blue eyes of startling brightness. These two pairs of eyes watched him incessantly; moved around the room as he moved, showed neither affection nor dislike.